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Logos of Phenomenology and Phenomenology of the Logos. Book Four: The Logos of Scientific Interrogation. Participating in Nature-Life-Sharing in Life

Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Phenomenology; Logic; Metaphysics; Philosophy of Mind; Philosophy of Science

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2006 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-3736-8

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-3737-5

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer 2006

Tabla de contenidos

Scientific Knowledge and Human Knowledge

Maria Gołaszewska

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 3-20

Science in Mind: Exploring the Language of the Logos

Leo Zonneveld

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 21-37

“Objective Science” in Husserlian Life-World Phenomenology

Aria Omrani

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 39-44

Phenomenological Aspects of the Natural Coordinate System

N. Kozhevnikov

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 45-55

Alienation and Wholeness

Wendy C. Hamblet

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 57-65

M. Heidegger’s Project for the Optical Interpretation of Reflexion: The Time, the Reflexion and the Logos

Alexander Kuzmin

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 67-80

“Phenomena” in Newton’s Mathematical Experience

A. L. Samian

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 81-95

What Computers Could Never Do

Eldon C. Wait

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 97-104

Sensible Models in Cognitive Neuroscience

Arthur Piper

Four hundred and fifty million people suffer from a mental or behavioral disorder, yet only a small minority of them receive even the most basic treatment according to the World Health Organisation . 1,000,000 people die as a result of the act of suicide each year, and every year across the world ). This problem permeates all aspects and levels of our world civilizations despite the increased interconnectedness of our peoples and the evolution of mans’ knowledge and abilities over the last century. Such evidence directs a number of key phenomenological questions within the seventh moment. Within the quest of humanity to be, how do humans survive, exist and be within a mental or behavioural disorder? Within the act of looking outwards to the modern world for possible answers and explanations, that very global world seeps inwards and captures our being. But within that duality, interpretation and understanding, the evidence suggests that many humans find aspects to that answer that may indicate an apparent meaningless being. This question prompts the phenomenological question, What is the nature and meaning of mental health and mental distress in the world of today? And I ask whether philosophers have abandoned this search to the detriment of humanity and therein neglected to question the boundaries and limits of the actuality and potentiality of being? Answering these questions is the key vocation and responsibility of philosophy and the core of the project of phenomenology and in particular phenomenology in the health sciences. Looking and reflecting inwards on being, requires us to examine how the world of the seventh moment impacts upon being. This paper examines these questions through phenomenological methods by returning to the roots of being, and questions theory of being, through an alternative integration or convolution of ontological and teleological schema, the Trialectic.

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 105-118

Philosophical Aspects of the New Evolutionistic Paradigms

Roberto Verolini; Fabio Petrelli

—Winogradsky, 1887

Section I - The Interrogative Logos of Discovery | Pp. 119-136